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Showing 1 to 15 of 196 results Save | Export
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Matthew R. Anderson; Cammi J. Dargatz; Tuhina Banerjee; Natasha M. DeVore – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2024
Green fluorescent protein has long been a favorite protein for demonstrating protein purification in the biochemistry lab course. The protein's vivid green color helps demonstrate to students the concept(s) behind affinity or ion exchange chromatography. We designed a series of introduction to biochemistry labs utilizing a thermostable green…
Descriptors: Science Education, Biochemistry, Laboratory Experiments, Color
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Nanette M. Wachter; Evan H. Kreth; Ronald P. D'Amelia – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
Keto-enol tautomerization is paramount to understanding the mechanisms involved in many organic reactions and biochemical transformations. Isomerization of an enol to a carbonyl compound is typically introduced during the discussion of the acid-catalyzed electrophilic addition of water to alkynes. The tautomerization of carbonyl compounds to enol…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation
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Vincent Natalis; Bernard Leyh – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2025
Entropy and the second law of thermodynamics have long been identified as difficult concepts to teach in the physical chemistry curriculum. Their highly abstract nature, mathematical complexity and emergent nature underscore the necessity to better link classical thermodynamics and statistical thermodynamics. The objectives of this systematic…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Thermodynamics, Scientific Concepts
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Liora Katz; Leonardo Silva-Dias; Milos Dolnik – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
Under the appropriate conditions, oscillatory chemical reactions have the capacity to generate chemical waves and spatial patterns. Among these structures, Turing patterns are a distinct class that, to date, has not been commonly demonstrated in a classroom environment. We present here a novel, practical procedure for the demonstration of Turing…
Descriptors: Science Education, Scientific Concepts, Chemistry, Lecture Method
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White, Joel – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The conceptual gambit of this article is to propose that the notion of anti-entropy should be complemented by that of exergy investment or destruction, a term first proposed by Zoran Rant in 1956. It argues that one of Bernard Stiegler's most important interventions into deconstruction is the thermodynamic reformulation of Derridean…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Thermodynamics, Educational Philosophy, Energy
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Moore, Thomas – Chemical Engineering Education, 2022
It is natural to interpret entropy as a measure of energy dispersion. However, the classical, phenomenological introduction to the topic, which relies on detailed analysis of Carnot engines, obscures this interpretation. Here, we propose a modification of the classical approach, which allows the basic properties of entropy to be proven without…
Descriptors: Energy, Teaching Methods, Scientific Concepts, Science Instruction
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César Zúñiga-Loyola; Maria-Soledad Ureta-Zanartu; Federico Tasca – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
Energy conversion devices such as fuel cells, metal-air batteries, and electrolyzers have been envisaged as possible solutions for cutting down the continuous accumulation of greenhouse gases resulting from the combustion of fossil fuel. The bottleneck reaction for these devices is the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) occurring at the cathode. The…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Chemistry, Thermodynamics
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Tomas Linder – Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education, 2024
Anaerobic respiration reactions are of fundamental importance to global biogeochemical cycling of elements. Yet, the idea that cellular respiration can occur not only in the absence of oxygen but also involve the oxidation of inorganic substrates (e.g., AsO[subscript 3 superscript 3-], Fe[superscript 2+], H[subscript 2], H[subscript 2]S,…
Descriptors: Science Education, Undergraduate Study, College Science, Scientific Concepts
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Bussotti, Paolo – International Baltic Symposium on Science and Technology Education, 2023
In this research, an educational approach to the concept of energy is proposed. It is based on the history of physics. In 1854 Hermann Hemlholtz gave a popular lecture on the recent discovery that energy is conserved. Such lecture is used as a guide to introduce the pupils within several nuances of this concept. Not much mathematics is used, so…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Energy, Science History, Physics
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Knight, Randall – Physics Teacher, 2022
Of all the conceivable ideal-gas processes, almost all introductory physics textbooks as well as more advanced texts on thermodynamics emphasize only four: isochoric, isobaric, isothermal, and adiabatic (isentropic). These are processes in which a state variable--volume, pressure, temperature, or entropy--remains constant. It turns out that these…
Descriptors: Physics, Introductory Courses, Science Instruction, Thermodynamics
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George Ashline; Bret Findley; Mitchell Andrea; Dylan Wawruck – PRIMUS, 2024
We describe the components and implementation of an activity for multivariable calculus featuring applications to the field of chemistry. This activity focuses on the isobaric thermal expansion coefficient found using partial differentiation of the volume of an ideal gas with respect to temperature as pressure is held constant. Broader goals of…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Mathematics Instruction, Calculus, Chemistry
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Mary Jane Brundage; David E. Meltzer; Chandralekha Singh – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2024
We use the Survey of Thermodynamic Processes and First and Second Laws-Long (STPFaSL-Long), a research-based survey instrument with 78 items at the level of introductory physics, to investigate introductory and advanced students' difficulties with entropy and the second law of thermodynamics. We present an analysis of data from 12 different…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Thermodynamics, Introductory Courses, Advanced Courses
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Thomas S. Kuntzleman – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
An activity is described that uses simple materials and an easy-to-perform protocol to estimate the Curie temperature of nickel, which is the temperature at which nickel loses its ferromagnetism. To do so, an object made of nickel metal is heated with a lighter until it loses its ferromagnetism. The metal is allowed to drop into a beaker that…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Science Experiments
Lo, William Chung Hei – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Twenty nine students who had previously taken an undergraduate thermal physics course were interviewed about their basic knowledge about statistical mechanics at the undergraduate level. Of these 29, fourteen were undergraduate students, and fifteen were graduate students at varying stages of their career. This project aimed to identify and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Mechanics (Physics), Thermodynamics, Statistics
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Rachel D. Davidson; Thomas E. O'Loughlin; Theodore E. G. Alivio; Soon-Mi Lim; Sarbajit Banerjee – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
In this laboratory experiment, students modify a series of surfaces and explore the effects of varying surface chemistry and texture on wettability by different probe liquids. Students begin by building a simple contact angle goniometer utilizing their mobile phone cameras. Next, they contrast the wettability of planar glass substrates…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Laboratory Experiments, Telecommunications
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